Opting in/Opting Out

Under Michigan law Friend of the Court offices must open and maintain a Friend of the Court case file for all domestic relations matters. The parties to a domestic relations case may refuse all services provided by the Friend of the Court, if they meet specific statutory requirements. Many refer to this provision in the statute as "opting out of FOC services".

OPTING OUT

Requirement to Open FOC Case; Authorization for Parties to Opt Out

Michigan law requires the FOC to open and maintain a case for each domestic relations matter, unless the parties opt out of the FOC system. When parties opt out, they assume full responsibility for the administration and enforcement of the court's orders, and the FOC no longer maintains an open file.

Statutory Procedure to Opt Out

In new and existing domestic relations cases, parties who agree to manage their own case must file a motion, sign an acknowledgement: Form FOC 101 (Advice of Rights Regarding Use of Friend of the Court Services), which lists services that the FOC provides, and both appear before the Court on the scheduled hearing date to provide sworn testimony of qualification for opting out. By signing the form, the parties acknowledge that they will not receive the services.

The court must approve the agreement and enter an order directing the FOC to close its case file unless the court determines that one or more of the following are true:

A party objects to the motion.
A party is eligible for Title IV-D services because the party is receiving public assistance (see Section 3, "Public Assistance", below).
A party is eligible for Title IV-D services because the party formerly received public assistance and an arrearage is owed to the governmental entity that provided the assistance.
The record shows that a child support arrearage or custody or parenting time order violation occurred within the previous 12 months.
Within the previous 12 months, a party to the case reopened this or another FOC case.
There is evidence of domestic violence or uneven bargaining positions and evidence that a party's decision to opt out of the FOC system is against the best interests of the party or a child.
The parties have not filed form FOC 101 listing the available FOC services and acknowledging that the parties are choosing to do without those services.

Public Assistance

The law prohibits parties from closing their FOC file if they are receiving or have received public assistance and an arrearage is owed to the state. Public assistance includes programs such as Temporary Assistance to Needy Families, (TANF), Medicaid, Food Assistance Program (FAP), child day care, and foster care.

Domestic Violence

Other factors that will prevent the parties from opting out of the FOC system include a history of domestic violence or uneven bargaining positions between the parties. If domestic violence has occurred, a party may feel coerced to opt out of FOC system even though doing so is against the party's or the child's best interests. The court may wish to check the record for certain indicators of abuse, such as personal protection orders.

Notifying Employer

When an FOC case file is closed and support payments are, at that time, being paid through income withholding, the FOC must send notice to terminate the income withholding to the payer's employer.

Support payments through MiSDU

If a party wants to ensure that all child support payments made after the FOC case file is closed will be taken into account in a possible future FOC enforcement action, than the opt-out order should require that those support payments be made through the MiSDU. If the MiSDU will remain involved, then the FOC cannot close its case file until notified by the MiSDU that the parties have provided the necessary information to enable MiSDU to process the support payments. If the parties do not choose to have payments made through MiSDU, and they subsequently opt back into the FOC, the FOC system will monitor only those support payments that fall due after the FOC case file is reopened.

Services the FOC cannot provide

Once an order exempting a case from FOC services has been entered, the parties assume full responsibility for the administration and enforcement of the court's orders. The FOC then cannot be involved in enforcement, investigation, or accounting functions for support, custody, or parenting time. This prohibition exists regardless of whether the support payments are being made through the MiSDU.

OPTING IN

Reopening an FOC Case (Opt In)

Parties who have opted out of FOC services may change their minds. If either party requests services from the FOC, or applies for public assistance, the FOC is required to open (or re-open) its case file.

A party should file Form FOC 104 (Request to Reopen Friend of the Court Case) and Form FOC 23 (Verified Statement) with the FOC and send a copy of Form 104 to the other party's last known address and to the court. The case file will be reopened when the FOC receives this information. The other party cannot object to the case being reopened.

When parties opt out of the FOC system, they may have support orders that do not satisfy statutory requirements for FOC cases. If the court order does not contain a provision that is required by either the Friend of the Court Act, the Support and Parenting Time Enforcement Act, or court rule, upon opening or reopening an FOC case file, the court must issue an order or amended order that includes the statutory provisions. A motion may be filed for any specific relief.

If there is a dispute about support payments made during the time the case was not an FOC case, and the payments were not made through the MiSDU, the parties must ask the circuit court to resolve the dispute by filing a motion regarding support. Since the disputed payments were to have been made directly between the parties, the FOC does not have any evidence of those payments. The FOC cannot intervene other than to let the parties know they will need a judicial determination of the payment history.